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47 Neth. J. Legal. Phil. 3 (2018)

handle is hein.journals/njlp47 and id is 1 raw text is: 








OPINION


Dealing with Ambiguity: Johan Maurits, Black

Pete and the the Crisis of Dutch Identity*

Lukas van den Berge


1.  Introduction

A dominant  way in which the Dutch think of themselves entails the image of an
enlightened nation, too small to be really significant in world politics but never-
theless important as an ethical guiding light for other nations. In recent years,
that self-congratulatory image has been severely challenged - not only by the rise
of right-wing populist parties and the assassinations of Pim Fortuyn and Theo
van Gogh, but also by a growing awareness of the troublesome nature of Dutch
colonial history and of patterns of exclusion and oppression in Dutch culture as
they have now come  to the surface in a globalizing world.' Public debate is domi-
nated by the opposing sides of those who one-sidedly debunk Dutch culture and
politics as oppressive and violent and others who persist in the myth of innocent
bystandership and  enlightened progressivism. Worried about the fierceness of
that debate, many scholars and publicists have called for a more nuanced discus-
sion, typically emphasizing the 'grey middle ground' in between black and white
opposites.2 By way of illustration of the identity crisis that Dutch society is cur-
rently dealing with, this short discussion paper starts out by providing the exam-
ples of the  remembrance   of Johan  Maurits's governorship  of Dutch  Brazil
(1637-1644) and the stereotyped persona of Black Pete (one of the central figures
in an annual children's festival) as two recent objects of heated debate. Subse-
quently, it explores an alternative way out of the crisis, calling in the help of what
may  come as a surprising source: ancient Greek tragedy.


2.  Johan  Maurits

Founded  in 1621 to disturb the Iberian supremacy in the Americas, the Dutch
West  India Company  (WIC) gained a significant foothold in north-eastern Brazil
in 1630, conquering the region of Pernambuco as one of the richest sugar produc-
ing areas in the world. Confronted with a lack of settlers from the Low Countries,


*   Thanks go out to Mirthe Jiwa, Wouter Veraart and Tamar de Waal for their helpful comments on
    an earlier draft of this discussion paper.
1   See, e.g., Gloria Wekker, White Innocence: Paradoxes of Colonialism and Race (Durham: Duke Uni-
    versity Press, 2016).
2   See, e.g., www.dtbg.nl for the 'Grey Manifesto' published by the academic platform that calls
    itself 'Dare to be Grey.'


Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy 2018 (47) 1                         3
doi: 10.5553/NJLP/.000069

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